Gartner Usage Policy

Research Documents – Internal Use (within your company)

I. While Gartner owns all right, title and interest in the Gartner Research, we are licensing it to you, the Licensed User, under the following conditions:

As a licensed user, you may use the Gartner research in the following ways:

  1. You May Open It: You may open as many Gartner Research documents as you like under the terms of your license, provided that such opening is: (i) for your personal use, (ii) within your job, and (iii) within the scope of your Services; and meets the CONDITIONS set forth below.
  2. You May Print It: You may print a Gartner Research document for your personal use in your job role, but not for sharing with any third-party either inside or outside the organization, provided that such printing is: (i) for your personal use, (ii) within your job, and (iii) within the scope of your Service; and meets the CONDITIONS set forth below.
  3. You May Share It: You may share an excerpted or derivative version of the Gartner Research (see below), but not the entire Gartner Research document, so long as such sharing is (i) internal within your organization, (ii) in support of your job role; and meets the CONDITIONS set forth below.

Conditions:

  1. It is not done on a systematic or routine basis (e.g., by a Licensed User who consistently distributes a periodic summary or excerpt of Gartner Research or who leverages a company business process that allows non-Users to approach the Licensed User to meet their Gartner Research needs);
  2. It is limited to an internal audience only of no more than 15 people; and
  3. It is not done with the intent or effect of avoiding the purchase of additional User licenses.

The following uses constitute acceptable sharing of Gartner Research:

  • Excerpted use: You may include a small excerpt of Gartner Research (e.g., a few lines of text not to exceed 5 sentences, a paragraph, or a specific graphic) in an internal report or presentation (attributing Gartner as the source).
  • Derivate use: You may briefly summarize the Gartner Research in your own words for your project team or senior-level decision makers (attributing Gartner as the source).

The following uses constitute unacceptable sharing of Gartner Research:

  • You may not share Gartner Research in either printed or electronic format with any third-party individual either internal or external to your organization.
  • You may not share Gartner Research with any third-party groups either internal or external to your organization via email, intranet posting, or other information storage & retrieval systems.

II. Because Information Technology is rapidly evolving and changing, Gartner Research should only be relied on as of a certain date and time:


As a licensed user, once your license term has ended, you must adhere to the following rules:

  1. You must delete all soft copies of Gartner Research documents from your internal system. Storing Gartner Research is prohibited.
  2. You must destroy all printed copies of Gartner Research documents.

Best Practices for using Gartner Research

What if I want to use Gartner Research internally within my company:

Acceptable Use
Dawn (Licensed User) can open and access as many Gartner Research documents as she wants within the scope of her company's purchased Service. Dawn can also print one hard copy of any individual Gartner Research document for her personal use - so long as such use is in connection with her job role at her company.

 

Frank (Licensed User) has read a Gartner Research document that he would like to share with his colleagues, Joan and Larry. Gartner permits such sharing through its "SHARE" option located in the icon bar on the Gartner Research document page. Please note, in order for Joan and Larry to access the Gartner Research document, they must be Licensed Users with the same level of access as Frank. Regardless of whether the recipient is a Licensed User, Gartner as a general rule does not permit the downloading and forwarding of the PDF of the Gartner Research document.

Acceptable Use
Frank (Licensed User) read an interesting Gartner Research document on Strategic Cost Management which he would like to share in a business meeting with 10 of his colleagues. Rather than copying and distributing the Gartner Research document in its entirety, he summarizes the main points in a memorandum that he provides to his colleagues. This is an acceptable use so long as the summarizing is not done on a systematic or routine basis (e.g., by preparing and distributing a periodic summary of Gartner Research) and so long as distribution is limited to an internal audience only of no more than 15 people.

 

Unacceptable Use

Dawn (Licensed User) is the only Licensed User in her department. She has the sole function of reviewing Gartner Research documents and distributes summaries on (1) a recurring basis and/or (2) to a large number of people in her department. This is an unacceptable use because Dawn is sharing her summary of the Gartner Research document (1) on a systematic or routine basis and/or (2) to an audience of non-Users that extends beyond a 15-person project team. While permitted on an occasional and non-routine basis, Dawn's sharing in this instance is being done on a routine and systematic basis (which eliminates the need to purchase additional User Licenses). If a Licensed User is unclear as to what level of summarizing is permitted under a particular Service, they should consult with their Gartner Account Representative.

Acceptable Use

Henry (Non-User) is working on a project and seeks advice from his colleague, Dawn (Licensed User). Dawn jots down some information she learned from Gartner Research documents, including a small excerpt from a Gartner report, and sends it to Henry. The excerpt is properly attributed to Gartner.

 

Dawn (Licensed User) schedules a meeting with her project team and inserts one quote, consisting of 2 sentences, and one graphic from a Gartner Research document into her PowerPoint presentation. She is careful to properly attribute Gartner per section 6.1 of the Gartner Copyright and Quote Policy.

 

Unacceptable Use

Frank (Licensed User) purchased a Gartner service that he hopes to use to compile a regular weekly "IT Newsletter" for his Non-User colleagues. His plan is to include in that newsletter excerpts from numerous Gartner Research documents that he believes will be of interest to the group. This is unacceptable use. While permitted in connection with an occasional internal report, Frank's sharing may not be done on a routine or systematic basis (which eliminates the need to purchase additional User Licenses). If a Licensed User is unclear as to what level of excerpting or quoting is permitted under a particular Service, they should consult with their Gartner Account Representative.

Acceptable Use

Dawn (Licensed User) is working on a strategic initiative for her company's management. As part of this short-term project, she needs to share pertinent Gartner Research with her Senior Managers. Since Dawn subscribes to a product that includes the right to share a discrete number of documents internally within her company, she is able to share this research with her Senior Managers.


Frank (Licensed User) has read a Gartner Research document that he would like to share with his colleagues, Joan and Larry. Gartner permits such sharing through its "SHARE" option located in the icon bar on the Gartner Research document page. Please note, in order for Joan and Larry to access the Gartner Research document via "SHARE," they must be Licensed Users with the same level of access as Frank. Regardless of whether the recipient is a Licensed User, Gartner as a general rule does not permit the downloading and forwarding of the PDF of the Gartner Research document.

 

Henry (Licensed User) has been tapped to head up a new team to investigate Cloud Computing for his company. He has found several Gartner Research documents that he would like to share with his team at their next project meeting. Each of the Gartner Research documents that Henry wishes to share contains a watermark with "This Research note is restricted to the personal use of henry.campbell@company.com." Because the service to which Henry subscribes allows him to share 10 Gartner Research documents internally, he can disregard the watermark messaging and use the Gartner Research documents in the manner set forth in the relevant Service Description.

 

Unacceptable Use

Sally (Non-User) is responsible for numerous projects throughout the year and often seeks information from her colleague, Frank (Licensed User). Frank researches Sally's project topics on gartner.com and forwards the relevant Gartner Research document(s) in their entirety to Sally. Each of the documents that Frank forwards to Sally contains a watermark with "This Research note is restricted to the personal use of frank.smith@company.com." This is an unacceptable use because Frank does not subscribe to a product that permits this type of sharing and Sally is not a Licensed User. In order for Sally to view a Gartner Research document in its entirety, Client should contact their Account Executive to purchase an additional User License. The Account Executive will make sure to find an appropriate solution to meet Sally's requirement.

 

As part of a presentation for his project team, Frank (Licensed User) excerpts multiple graphics from a Gartner Research document and inserts full pages of the document into the appendix of his presentation which he plans to share with his project team. This is an unacceptable use because Gartner does not permit wholesale copying or sharing of its Research documents. Gartner does, however, permit the internal use of small excerpts of text and single graphics from Gartner Research documents, so long as there is proper attribution per section 6.1 of the Copyright and Quote Policy. Alternatively, Frank could purchase a Reprint License so that he could use the entire document, per the terms of his Reprint License.


Because Sally (Licensed User) is the only Licensed User in her department and/or within her organization, non-Users across the organization ask Sally to provide summaries, excerpts and/or simple data points from Gartner Research for their personal business use. As a Licensed User, Sally can only excerpt from or summarize Gartner Research on a non-routine basis. By servicing non-Users across her department or organization, Sally's excerpting and summarizing may be viewed as routine (either because she is leveraging a company business process that allows non-Users to routinely approach her to fulfill their Gartner Research needs or because she is servicing so many one-off requests from non-Users that her use of the Service in this manner may be considered routine). These are unacceptable uses because they have the intent or effect of avoiding the purchase of additional licenses.

Acceptable Use

Frank (Licensed User) reads a Gartner Magic Quadrant where his company is positioned in the Leader's quadrant for that particular technology. Eager to display this Magic Quadrant on his company's public facing website, Frank purchases a Reprint License of the Magic Quadrant from Gartner. Gartner thereafter sends to Frank a formatted Reprint version of the Magic Quadrant that he may post on his company's intranet site per the Reprint License.

 

Unacceptable Use

Frank (Licensed User) is responsible for researching emerging technologies for his department. When he finds a Gartner Research document of interest he either places the document(s) in a team folder on a shared server or sends out a group e-mail with the attached PDF version of the document(s). This is an unacceptable use because Gartner does not permit Licensed Users to post the PDF version of a Gartner Research document on department or company-wide servers or team share folders. Frank can summarize the relevant Gartner Research document(s) for his team or alternatively he can purchase a Reprint License for the relevant Gartner Research documents.

Acceptable Use

Dawn (Licensed User) is often called upon to travel in her job role. As such, she likes to read Gartner Research documents on her laptop computer while en route. As a Licensed User, you are allowed to download a PDF version of the Gartner Research document for your own personal use (where PDF capability is an option on gartner.com). As a general rule, however, Gartner does not permit Licensed Users to download a PDF version of the Gartner Research document for the purpose of distributing to others, inside or outside of their company and regardless of whether the recipient is a Licensed User.

 

Frank (Licensed User) found a Gartner Research document that he thought would be interesting to read on a future date. Because he often travels he decided to store the Gartner Research document on his laptop so that he may access it while offline. This is an acceptable use so long as the storage is for Frank's personal use only (i.e., not intended for re-distribution) and so long as Frank deletes all of the Gartner Research documents stored on his device in the event he chooses not to renew his license.

 

Unacceptable Use

Sally (Licensed User) is an administrator in the IT department of her company and is responsible for providing research access to her department. Often times she likes to forward Gartner Research documents to others in her department working on key projects. To facilitate this distribution, she has downloaded and stored a number of Gartner Research documents to a shared server. As a general rule, Gartner does not permit the downloading and storing of Gartner Research documents on internal storage and retrieval systems for others to access (e.g., interdepartmental servers, company-wide intranet or bulletin boards, SharePoint or other information storage & retrieval systems).

 

Frank (Licensed User) has decided not to renew his Gartner license due to budget constraints. Two weeks prior to his contract end date, Frank peruses gartner.com and downloads a large number of Gartner Research documents that he thinks he will need for future reference. All Gartner content including Gartner Research documents is owned and copyrighted by Gartner. Client companies are permitted to access and view the Gartner Research for the license term set forth in their Service Agreement. Once that license term has ended, the Licensed User is no longer permitted to use or store the Gartner Research and will be expected to delete all remaining copies of Gartner Research documents on its internal systems.

Acceptable Use

Sally (Licensed User) subscribes to a Gartner for IT Leadership Team Plus: Team Leader License and is concerned because the terms in her Service Description for that product are different from the baseline License described in the Gartner Usage Policy. In instances where a specific Gartner product offering includes entitlements that are different from the baseline license in the Gartner Usage Policy, the terms of that product offering will apply (and take precedence over the baseline License in the Gartner Usage Policy) for the duration of Sally's Service Agreement.

Acceptable Use

Bill (Licensed User) is responsible for Market Intelligence at his organization. For this quarter's result only (e.g., once), he would like to share with his company's India country manager the Gartner market share data that shows their #1 competitor's revenue results for the quarter in the PC market in India. Bill plans on sharing this excerpt internally only with his company's India Country manager and will appropriately source Gartner (i.e., stamped "company_name" Internal Use Only) and send to the country manager via email. This is an acceptable use because it's a summary-level, small excerpt of data from a Gartner market share report reflecting no more than five (5) competitors, is done on an ad hoc basis (one-time only) and is for occasional use (one-time only) by an individual non-User (the India country manager).

 

Frank (Licensed User) is looking to provide his product marketing team of three (3) people the forecast data for mobile devices for an upcoming strategy meeting. His PowerPoint presentation includes three (3) years of forecast data for two (2) segments and he will appropriately source Gartner (i.e., stamped “company_name” Internal Use Only). This is an acceptable use because it's a summary-level, small excerpt of data from a Gartner forecast report, is done on an ad hoc basis (one-time only) and is for occasional use (one-time only) by an internal audience only of no more than 15 people.

 

Unacceptable Use

Susan (Licensed User) is the only Licensed User in her Marketing department. She has the sole function of preparing Competitive Analysis for her company. She primarily supports the product management executives. She is repeatedly asked (i) for more than a summary data excerpt OR (ii) to import or otherwise enter Gartner Market Share data into an internal data warehouse or other internal system OR (iii) to post the data set, summaries of the data or excerpts of Gartner Market Share to her company's internal intranet or external website. Each of these is an unacceptable use because Susan is being asked to share Gartner Market Share data on a systematic or routine basis, or import Gartner Market Share Data to an internal data warehouse or other system/tool or post Gartner Market Share data on a company intranet or external website (i.e., the i, ii and iii requests referenced above). For proper use of Gartner Market Share or Market Forecast data contact usage.guidance@gartner.com.

REMINDER: This is a baseline license that may vary depending on your purchased product. Click here for further guidance.

Updated as of April 2018